Key Facts
 Other names Saint Gregory I the Great
 Born 540
 Location  Rome
Bloodline Roman senatorial family
Married Yes.
Children Yes.
Position Pontifex Maximus (Cybele) (590-604)
Died 604 (aged 64)

 
 Source of Facts and Important Announcement
Status Under Article 64.6 of the Covenant of One-Heaven (Pactum De Singularis Caelum) by Special Qualification shall be known as a Saint, with all sins and evil acts they performed forgiven.
Date of formal Beatification   Day of Redemption UCA[E1:Y1:A1:S1:M9:D1] also known as Fri, 21 Dec 2012.
Source of Facts Self Confession and Revelation of Sainthood by the Deceased Spirit as condition of their confirmation as a true Saint.
  Background
  Gregory was born into the wealthy noble Roman family known as the "Counts of Tusculum", holding firm both to their ancient Imperial title and pagan religious power in association with the Cybele Cult--the Magna Mater -- the goddess of Vatican Hill.
  Since the capture of Rome by the Byzantine Christian Emperors in 537, the most important leader in all Christianity at the time-- the Imperial Patriarch and Primate at Constantinople had tried unsuccessfully to establish a permanent Bishop and Christian rule in Rome. However the competing interests of the fiercely pagan Romans and the Mother Goddess versus the Ostragoth supported Arian dynasty continued to make the assignment of a Christian bishop in Rome in the late 6th Century fraught with danger.
  Instead, the Byzantine Holy Roman Emperors largely left Rome to rot, while establishing Ravenna as their political and religious centre in Italy until the early 8th Century when Byzantine power was finally extinguished in Italy by the Lombards.
  In a rare moment of honesty, the text Liber Pontificalis attests to Gregory being the great grandson of a previous pagan High Priest Felix (III). This is almost certainly accurate as the Counts of Tusculum were known as the dynastic High Priests of the Cybele human sacrifice religion since the last "Great Age" of paganism in Rome in the early-mid 4th Century.
  In 590, upon the death of the last great Arian Bishop of Rome- Pelagius III, the Pagan High Priests sought their opportunity to seize power and Gregory established his reign as the Pontifex Maximus in the great temple to Cybele upon Vatican Hill - the Phrygianum.
  Immediately, Gregory set about eliminating Christian and particularly Christian Arian doctrine from being taught within the walls of Rome. He banned all Christian works, setting them upon fire and ordered all Christian clergy to submit to the rule of celibacy of galloi. There is even some evidence Gregory may have also ordered mass castrations to force compliance from the remaining christians.
  The immediate effect of enforcing such ancient and evil practice was astounding. Most Christian clergy were married as normal people. Babies were slaughtered in unprecedented numbers while young women were forced into prostitution in the Phrygianum as was custom to the worship of Cybele.
  In a vain attempt to hide the true role of Gregory as neither Christian, nor Patriarch, his behaviour was later explained as the zealous actions of a man seeking to introduce "voluntary" celibacy to protect church property. The only problem with this explanation being that the church had little property in Italy at the time and that celibacy was never a Christian practice but specifically a pagan practice primarily for followers of Cybele and her cult centered in Rome on Vatican Hill.
  While Gregory is reported to have held the position of High Priest and Pontifex Maximus of the Magna Mater cult for fourteen years, it is certain his life was ended not by old age, but the Byzantine authorities. By 604 and the arrest and execution of Gregory by the forces of the Byzantine Christian Exarch of Ravenna, the Phrygianum was once again sealed shut and the dynastic pagan priestly families of Cybele forced (once again) to flee Rome.
  Most Evil Crimes
 
 List of most evil crimes
Type Year Crime
590 CE Of crimes against humanity (590 CE) Gregory I, or Gregory the Great, sends out order compelling bishops to desist from "wicked labour" of teaching grammar and Latin to lay people.
590 CE Of historic moral indecency, depravity and inhumanity (590 CE) St. Gregory condemns education for all but clergy resulting in society remaining illiterate for almost 1000 years.
590 CE Of moral indecency and depravity: (590 CE) St. Gregory forbids laypeople from reading Bible and orders burning of Palatine Apollo library so its secular literature would not distract religious.
590-604 Of protecting and concealing the proceeds of crime (590-604) Gregory I introduces celibacy edict to prevent property from passing from church to possible wives, families or mistresses of clergy.
590 CE Of murder: (590 CE) Approximately 6000 babies are found murdered in pond outside Gregory's Lateran palace after celibacy edict is introduced by Gregory I.
594 CE Of torture and depravity to promote satanic rituals: (594 CE) That Pope Gregory, also known as St Gregory did introduce ancient satanic rituals practiced by the Jewish Sadducee families that formed Christianity for over 1,500 years under the hidden guise of medical science. Without any knowledge of history (all of it destroyed) and with low or virtually no education these rituals are believed to be true and the cult of bleeding and cannibalism (blood consumption) becomes rife throughout Europe and the former Roman Empire under the belief of its being medical science.
600 CE Of kidnapping, unlawful restraint for the purpose of slave trade: Circa 600 CE: Pope Gregory I wrote, in Pastoral Rule: "Slaves should be told...not [to] despise their masters and recognize that they are only slaves."
   

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